Aphrodite - The Greek Goddess Of Love And Beauty
Aphrodite (
Greek: Ἀφροδίτη) is the
Greek goddess of love, beauty, pleasure, and procreation. Her
Roman equivalent is the goddess
Venus. She is identified with the planet Venus.
As with many ancient Greek deities, there is more than one story about her origins. According to
Hesiod's Theogony, she was born when
Cronus cut off
Uranus's genitals and threw them into the sea, and she arose from the sea foam (aphros). According to
Homer's Iliad, she is the daughter of
Zeus and Dione. According to
Plato (
Symposium, 180e), these two origins were of entirely separate entities:
Aphrodite Ourania and
Aphrodite Pandemos.
Because of her beauty, other gods feared that their rivalry over her would interrupt the
peace among them and lead to war, so Zeus married her to
Hephaestus, who, because of his ugliness and deformity, was not seen as a threat. Aphrodite had many lovers—both gods, such as
Ares, and men, such as
Anchises. She played a role in the
Eros and Psyche legend, and later was both
Adonis's lover and his surrogate mother. Many lesser beings were said to be children of Aphrodite.
Aphrodite is also known as
Cytherea (
Lady of
Cythera) and
Cypris (
Lady of Cyprus) after the two cult sites, Cythera and
Cyprus, which claimed to be her place of birth.
Myrtle, doves, sparrows, horses, and swans were said to be sacred to her. The ancient
Greeks identified her with the
Ancient Egyptian goddess Hathor.
Aphrodite had many other names, such as Acidalia, Cytherea, and Cerigo, each used by a different local cult of the goddess in
Greece.
The Greeks recognized all of these names as referring to the single goddess Aphrodite, despite the slight differences in what these local cults believed the goddess demanded of them.
The Attic philosophers of the
4th century, however, drew a distinction between a celestial Aphrodite (Aprodite
Urania) of transcendent principles, and a separate, "common" Aphrodite who was the goddess of the people (Aphrodite Pandemos).
Aphrodite, perhaps altered after aphrós (ἀφρός) "foam", stems from the more archaic
Cretan Aphordíta and
Cypriot Aphorodíta, and was probably ultimately borrowed from Cypriot
Phoenician.
Herodotus and
Pausanias recorded that Aphrodite's oldest non-Greek temple lay in the
Syrian city of
Ascalon where she was known as Ourania, an obvious reference to
Astarte. This suggests that Aphrodite's cult located at Cythera-Cyprus came from the
Phoenicians. The fact that one of Aphrodite's chief centers of worship remained on the southwestern Cypriot coast settled by Phoenicians, where the goddess had long been worshiped as Ashtart (ʻštrt), points to the transmission of Aphrodite's original cult from
Phoenicia to Cyprus then to mainland Greece. So far, however, attempts to derive the name from Aphrodite's
Semitic precursor have been inconclusive.
A number of folk etymologies have been proposed through the ages.
Hesiod derives Aphrodite from aphrós "foam," interpreting the name as "risen from the foam". Janda (
2010), accepting this as genuine, claims the foam birth myth as an Indo-European mytheme. Janda intereprets the name as a compound aphrós "foam" and déato "[she] seems, shines", meaning "she who shines from the foam [ocean]", supposedly a byname of Eos, the dawn goddess.
Likewise,
Mallory and
Adams (
1997) propose an Indo-European compound *abʰor- "very" and *dʰei- "to shine", also referring to Eos. However, etymologies based on comparison with Eos are unlikely since Aphrodite's attributes are entirely different from those of Eos (or the
Vedic deity Ushas).
Finally, the medieval
Etymologicum Magnum offers a highly contrived folk etymology, deriving Aphrodite from the compound habrodíaitos (ἁβροδίαιτος), "she who lives delicately", from habrós and díaita. The alteration from b to ph is explained as a "familiar" characteristic of Greek "obvious from the
Macedonians", despite of course that the name cannot be of
Macedonian origin.